liberating the creative power of the unconscious mind.
Surrealism
(1920-1930s)
Surrealism means "above realism"
- The Surrealist artists sought to channel the unconscious as a means to unlock the power of the imagination.(Breton, 2016).
- Surrealism began as a philosophical movement that said the way to find truth in the world was through the subconscious mind and dreams, rather than through logical thought (History: Surrealism art for kids, no date).
- All sorts of techniques and phenomena were employed to achieve this subconscious creativity, including dreams, hallucinations, automatic or random image generation (visual-arts-cork, no date).
Characteristics
- The exploration of the dream and unconsciousness as a valid form of reality.
- A willingness to depict images of perverse sexuality, scatology, decay and violence.
- The desire to push against the boundaries of socially acceptable behaviors and traditions.
- The incorporation of chance and spontaneity.
- The influence of revolutionary 19th century poets, such as Charles Baudelaire.
- Emphasis on the mysterious, marvelous, mythological and irrational in an effort to make art strange.
- Surrealism gave artists permission to express their most basic drives: hunger, sexuality, anger, fear,
- dread and ecstasy, and so forth.
- Exposing these uncensored feelings as if in a dream still exists in many form of art to this day (Gersh-Nesic, 2016)
A
pure psychic automatism
The
Artist:
Rene Magritte 1898-1967
- To support himself he spent many years working as a commercial artist, producing advertising and book designs.
- Magritte preferred the quiet anonymity of a middle-class existence, a life symbolized by the bowler-hatted men that often populate his pictures.
- The illustrative quality of Magritte's pictures often results in a powerful paradox: images that are beautiful in their clarity and simplicity, but which also provoke unsettling thoughts.
- The men in bowler hats that often appear in Magritte'spictures can be interpreted as self-portraits.(Foundation, 2016).
The Artist's work
Who am I?
I often travel deep into my interior, a place
where many of my dreams and images originate, with that said, in simple terms,
my name is jay, Short for Jason, personalized as JAYSEAN, Jay is a simple
whimsical creature with creepy eyes,differently wired! a lover of Art, Film, Music
and all things awesome.
Jay
spends most of his time chasing paper planes, finding beauty in dark places,
Jay is a curious child, Jay Loves Cats, maybe that’s the reason for his
curiosity?
If so… Jay might die, but jay doesn’t care
because Jay is Happy.
Philosophies
Everyone has a cloud at which they float through
life on, that cloud is made up of their own ideologies and beliefs, these are
mine:
• Stay Happy and Smile, Because I have
beautiful teeth.
• Always Make them remember your name.
• Life will throw curve balls, you don’t have
swing for them all, make
room for mistakes.
• When life gives you lemons, make an apple
pie.
My
biggest traits would be curiosity and Challenge; I always ask how
things are done, I dig deep into the core of
things rather than wondering
around
the surface, I’m a child that asks
“What if”.
Purpose
We all have reasons to wake up in the morning
and mine happens to be:
• The
Voice of the voiceless.
• I
live for those who color outside the lines.
Why
do I consider myself a surrealist?
I Consider Myself a surrealist because I
don’t believe in real life,
the only thing that’s real to me it’s what
goes on in my head,
I don’t look at life in a conversional way,
my dreams are the source of my reality.
My Personal and Design Manifesto
BIBLOGRAPHY
Breton, A. (2016) Surrealism movement,
artists and Major Works. Available at:
http://www.theartstory.org/movement-surrealism.htm
(Accessed: 27 August 2016).
Gersh-Nesic, B. (2016) What is surrealism?
Early 1920s to the present. Available at:
http://arthistory.about.com/od/modernarthistory/a/Surrealism-Art-History-101-Basics.htm
(Accessed: 27 August 2016).
History: Surrealism art for kids (no date)
Available at:
http://www.ducksters.com/history/art/surrealism.php
(Accessed: 27 August 2016).
Foundation, T.A.S. (2016) Rene Magritte
biography, art, and analysis of works. Available at:
http://www.theartstory.org/artist-magritte-rene-artworks.htm
(Accessed: 27 August 2016).
visual-arts-cork (no date) Surrealism Art
Movement. Available at:
http://www.visual-arts-cork.com/history-of-art/surrealism.htm
(Accessed: 27 August 2016).
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